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Shadow of Stillness

AshenVeil
7
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Rune didn't move. The rain seemed to slow down around him. He slowly lowered his umbrella, letting the cold rain hit his face. His expression wasn't angry; it was something far worse. It was profound, unbearable pity. "Look around you, Ash," Rune’s voice was soft, but it carried a weight that made the earth tremble. "Look at the children buried under this rubble. Look at the mothers. You didn't exact justice. You just created a thousand new orphans who will grow up to hate us, just as we hated the Nobles." Ash staggered to his feet, his dark aura exploding outward. "Don't you dare defend them! They took our heart! They took ..............! If the world demands a monster, I will be its nightmare! Stand with me, Rune! You are my brain, my brother! Together, we are gods!" "We were supposed to be human, Ash," Rune replied, his voice finally cracking with a barely hidden tremor of sorrow. "But humanity died in you the moment..........stopped breathing." Ash roared, blinded by grief and rage. He launched himself at Rune, summoning a tidal wave of pitch-black energy meant to consume everything in its path. Rune didn't flinch. He didn't even raise a hand. He simply looked at the incoming destruction and whispered a single, absolute word: "Still."
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Chapter 1 - Mud and Blood

The first thing Ash learned about the arena was that it did not care.

Not about screams.

Not about mercy.

Not even about death.

The chains around his wrists rattled as he was dragged forward, boots scraping uselessly against the mud. No—this wasn't mud.

It was thicker.

Darker.

It clung to his skin like something alive.

Blood.

The smell hit him first. Iron and rot, heavy in the air, forcing its way into his lungs with every breath. He gagged, but the guard behind him shoved him harder.

"Move."

Ash stumbled, nearly falling face-first into the crimson-soaked ground. Around him, the arena roared—not with excitement, but with hunger. People weren't cheering.

They were waiting.

Waiting for someone to die.

His someone.

He lifted his head slowly.

Across the pit, his opponent was already there.

A man. Bigger. Older. Covered in scars that told stories Ash didn't want to understand.

The man smiled.

It wasn't cruel.

It wasn't angry.

It was worse.

It was certain.

Ash's fingers trembled.

I'm going to die.

The thought came quietly. No panic. No screaming. Just a cold, simple truth settling deep inside his chest.

A bell rang.

The man moved first.

Fast.

Too fast.

Ash didn't think—he reacted. His body twisted awkwardly as a fist cut through the air where his face had been a heartbeat ago. He fell instead of dodging, crashing into the wet ground, the impact knocking the breath out of him.

Pain exploded in his ribs as a kick followed.

Then another.

Then another.

He curled instinctively, arms wrapping around his head.

This is how it ends.

A hand grabbed his hair, yanking his head up.

Their eyes met.

Up close, the man's expression hadn't changed.

Still certain.

Still calm.

As if Ash was already dead.

"Don't worry," the man muttered. "It's quick if you don't struggle."

Something inside Ash snapped.

Not courage.

Not strength.

Something uglier.

His hand moved before his mind could catch up.

He lunged forward—

And bit.

Teeth sank into flesh.

The man screamed.

It wasn't a clean sound. It tore through the arena, raw and shocked.

Ash didn't let go.

He bit harder.

Tasted blood.

Warm.

Real.

The grip in his hair loosened.

That was enough.

Ash slammed his forehead forward.

Once.

Twice.

The third time, something cracked.

The man staggered.

Ash scrambled up, slipping, shaking, barely able to stand—

But he moved.

Again.

And again.

Until the man stopped moving.

Silence.

Not complete.

But wrong.

Ash stood there, chest heaving, blood dripping from his mouth—not all of it his.

He looked down.

The man wasn't getting up.

He waited.

One second.

Two.

Three.

Nothing.

"I… won?"

The words didn't feel real.

Neither did the body at his feet.

A horn blared.

The crowd roared again.

This time louder.

Hungrier.

But Ash didn't hear it.

His hands were shaking.

Not from fear.

From something else.

Something empty.

Guards entered the arena, dragging the corpse away like discarded meat. One of them shoved Ash toward the exit.

"Next."

Ash stumbled forward, barely aware of where he was going.

As he passed the holding gates, he heard it.

A whisper.

Low.

Almost lost in the noise.

"…next match… him."

"…the one who doesn't move…"

Ash slowed.

"…never seen him fight…"

"…they just… stop…"

A chill crawled up his spine.

He turned slightly, just enough to look through the bars.

And for a brief moment—

He saw him.

A man sitting alone.

Clean.

Still.

A book resting calmly in his hands… in a place where nothing was calm.

He didn't look up.

Didn't react.

Didn't care.

Ash felt it then.

For the first time since entering the arena—

He was afraid.

Not of dying.

But of that man.